State of Knowledge on Climate Change, Water, and Economics

The current state of knowledge on climate change and water points to predominantly negative effects. This paper reviews the literature on these effects by geographical region and notes the differences as well as the uncertainties. An important feature is the fact that the climate effects will occur on top of water scarcity that currently prevails in many parts of the world. The impact of climate change on scarcity is present but generally small compared to the impact of the socioeconomic factors. Changes in efficiency of water use could make a big contribution to water problems, including those caused by climate change. In-depth estimates of damages from climate change related to water have been made to 2060 and, less accurately, to 2100. The 2060 estimates indicate that the impacts from water supply changes or changes in water-related extreme events and marine flows add up to about 1.5 of GDP in 2060 in the absence of mitigation or adaptation. This average figure, however, may be an underestimate of a number of reasons. Estimates to 2100 of potential damages in economic terms are even more uncertain but there are strong reasons to believe they will be greater as a percentage of GDP, perhaps around 10 globally and possibly even higher. Adaptation can make a major contribution to reducing damages from climate change for all mitigation scenarios, and more so when mitigation is absent or limited. Adaptation will require both private and public actions.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Markandya, Anil
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2017-04
Subjects:CLIMATE CHANGE, WATER SUPPLY, RAINFALL, MELTWATER, RUNOFF, FLOOD RISK, DROUGHT, WATER SCARCITY, WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT, CROP YIELDS, FISHERIES, COASTAL LAND, DISEASE, ADAPTATION TECHNOLOGY,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/462531493352979486/State-of-knowledge-on-climate-change-water-and-economics
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26491
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spelling dig-okr-10986264912021-05-25T08:59:55Z State of Knowledge on Climate Change, Water, and Economics Markandya, Anil CLIMATE CHANGE WATER SUPPLY RAINFALL MELTWATER RUNOFF FLOOD RISK DROUGHT WATER SCARCITY WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT CROP YIELDS FISHERIES COASTAL LAND DISEASE ADAPTATION TECHNOLOGY The current state of knowledge on climate change and water points to predominantly negative effects. This paper reviews the literature on these effects by geographical region and notes the differences as well as the uncertainties. An important feature is the fact that the climate effects will occur on top of water scarcity that currently prevails in many parts of the world. The impact of climate change on scarcity is present but generally small compared to the impact of the socioeconomic factors. Changes in efficiency of water use could make a big contribution to water problems, including those caused by climate change. In-depth estimates of damages from climate change related to water have been made to 2060 and, less accurately, to 2100. The 2060 estimates indicate that the impacts from water supply changes or changes in water-related extreme events and marine flows add up to about 1.5 of GDP in 2060 in the absence of mitigation or adaptation. This average figure, however, may be an underestimate of a number of reasons. Estimates to 2100 of potential damages in economic terms are even more uncertain but there are strong reasons to believe they will be greater as a percentage of GDP, perhaps around 10 globally and possibly even higher. Adaptation can make a major contribution to reducing damages from climate change for all mitigation scenarios, and more so when mitigation is absent or limited. Adaptation will require both private and public actions. 2017-05-02T16:49:13Z 2017-05-02T16:49:13Z 2017-04 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/462531493352979486/State-of-knowledge-on-climate-change-water-and-economics http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26491 English en_US Water Global Practice Discussion Paper; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Other Environmental Study Economic & Sector Work
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
en_US
topic CLIMATE CHANGE
WATER SUPPLY
RAINFALL
MELTWATER
RUNOFF
FLOOD RISK
DROUGHT
WATER SCARCITY
WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
CROP YIELDS
FISHERIES
COASTAL LAND
DISEASE
ADAPTATION TECHNOLOGY
CLIMATE CHANGE
WATER SUPPLY
RAINFALL
MELTWATER
RUNOFF
FLOOD RISK
DROUGHT
WATER SCARCITY
WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
CROP YIELDS
FISHERIES
COASTAL LAND
DISEASE
ADAPTATION TECHNOLOGY
spellingShingle CLIMATE CHANGE
WATER SUPPLY
RAINFALL
MELTWATER
RUNOFF
FLOOD RISK
DROUGHT
WATER SCARCITY
WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
CROP YIELDS
FISHERIES
COASTAL LAND
DISEASE
ADAPTATION TECHNOLOGY
CLIMATE CHANGE
WATER SUPPLY
RAINFALL
MELTWATER
RUNOFF
FLOOD RISK
DROUGHT
WATER SCARCITY
WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
CROP YIELDS
FISHERIES
COASTAL LAND
DISEASE
ADAPTATION TECHNOLOGY
Markandya, Anil
State of Knowledge on Climate Change, Water, and Economics
description The current state of knowledge on climate change and water points to predominantly negative effects. This paper reviews the literature on these effects by geographical region and notes the differences as well as the uncertainties. An important feature is the fact that the climate effects will occur on top of water scarcity that currently prevails in many parts of the world. The impact of climate change on scarcity is present but generally small compared to the impact of the socioeconomic factors. Changes in efficiency of water use could make a big contribution to water problems, including those caused by climate change. In-depth estimates of damages from climate change related to water have been made to 2060 and, less accurately, to 2100. The 2060 estimates indicate that the impacts from water supply changes or changes in water-related extreme events and marine flows add up to about 1.5 of GDP in 2060 in the absence of mitigation or adaptation. This average figure, however, may be an underestimate of a number of reasons. Estimates to 2100 of potential damages in economic terms are even more uncertain but there are strong reasons to believe they will be greater as a percentage of GDP, perhaps around 10 globally and possibly even higher. Adaptation can make a major contribution to reducing damages from climate change for all mitigation scenarios, and more so when mitigation is absent or limited. Adaptation will require both private and public actions.
format Working Paper
topic_facet CLIMATE CHANGE
WATER SUPPLY
RAINFALL
MELTWATER
RUNOFF
FLOOD RISK
DROUGHT
WATER SCARCITY
WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
CROP YIELDS
FISHERIES
COASTAL LAND
DISEASE
ADAPTATION TECHNOLOGY
author Markandya, Anil
author_facet Markandya, Anil
author_sort Markandya, Anil
title State of Knowledge on Climate Change, Water, and Economics
title_short State of Knowledge on Climate Change, Water, and Economics
title_full State of Knowledge on Climate Change, Water, and Economics
title_fullStr State of Knowledge on Climate Change, Water, and Economics
title_full_unstemmed State of Knowledge on Climate Change, Water, and Economics
title_sort state of knowledge on climate change, water, and economics
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2017-04
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/462531493352979486/State-of-knowledge-on-climate-change-water-and-economics
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26491
work_keys_str_mv AT markandyaanil stateofknowledgeonclimatechangewaterandeconomics
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